- John Canzano
John Canzano is an American sports journalist, radio host and sports columnist at "The Oregonian" newspaper in Portland, Oregon. - David Sarasohn
David Sarasohn (born August 17, 1950) is a columnist and managing editor for the Oregonian newspaper in Portland, Oregon. In his column he is a supporter of the Democrats. Prior to joining the "Oregonian", Sarasohn was a writer with Oregon magazine and a professor of history at Reed College. - David Reinhard
David Reinhard is a columnist for "The Oregonian", Oregon's largest newspaper. Mr. Reinhard is the "conservative" voice in "The Oregonian". His columns are a counterpoint to the typically more "liberal" work of fellow Associate Editor David Sarasohn. - Jack Ohman
Jack Ohman (b. September 1, 1960) is an American editorial cartoonist. He has been "The Oregonian"'s cartoonist since 1983 and his work is syndicated nationwide to over 300 newspapers by Tribune Media Services. Ohman first worked as a political aide for the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party (DFL) during his high school years in Minnesota. At age 17, Ohman worked at the Minnesota Daily, the student newspaper of the University of Minnesota. - Phil Stanford
Phil Stanford is a journalist and author. He is best known for his work on the murder of Oregon Corrections director Michael Francke and his efforts to prove the innocence of Frank Gable, the man who was convicted of the crime. Stanford worked for several years on the Oregonian before taking a job with the Portland Tribune. He now writes a biweekly column in that newspaper, … - Richard Read
Richard Read (born 1957) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist. Born in St Andrews, Scotland and raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Read graduated from Amherst College in 1980 and worked for a Massachusetts crime commission before moving to Portland, Oregon to become a reporter for "The Oregonian". In 1986, Read received a fellowship from the Henry Luce Foundation, which sent him to Bangkok, Thailand, … - Charles Larson
Charles Larson (ca. 1923 - 21 September 2006) was a writer and Emmy Award-nominated producer of television programs. Beginning his Hollywood career as a messenger for MGM, Larson ultimately became a screenwriter for short films and later for television. His TV writing credits during the 1950s include "Studio One", "The Lone Ranger", and "Climax!". During the 1960s, he wrote episodes for "The Virginian" and "Rawhide". - Dwight Jaynes
Dwight Jaynes is a journalist, sportswriter and radio personality in Portland, Oregon. He was a sports columnist with "The Oregonian" newspaper for several years. In 2001, he left to write a column in the fledgling "Portland Tribune" and to do a daily radio show for KPAM, a talk radio station owned by the same company as the Tribune. He has since left his radio role and works full-time for the Tribune, serving as the paper's executive editor. - Bill Porter
Bill Porter is an American salesman for the Watkins Company. Born with cerebral palsy, Porter became quite well known in 1995, when an Oregon newspaper wrote a series of feature stories about him. Born in September 9,1932 in California, Porter moved to Portland, Oregon with his mother at a young age. He was unable to gain employment due to his cerebral palsy, but refused to go on disability. - Bill Keller
Bill Keller (born January 18 , 1949 ) is executive editor of The New York Times . Bill Keller attended the Roman Catholic Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo, California . After graduating from Pomona College in 1970 where he began his journalistic career by founding an independent newspaper called The Collage , he was a reporter in Portland with The Oregonian , the Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report , and at The Dallas Times Herald . - David Biespiel
David Biespiel (born February 18, 1964) is an American poet born in Tulsa, Oklahoma and raised in Houston. From 1993-1995 he was a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University and in 1997 received a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Literature. He is a regular columnist on poetry for The Oregonian and his prose and poetry has appeared in American Poetry Review, The New York Times Book Review, Parnassus, Poetry, and The New Republic. - Jeff Jahn
Jeff Jahn is a critic, curator, artist, blogger and composer based in Portland, Oregon, USA. Curator of art exhibitions like Play (2002), The Best Coast (2003), Symbiont Synthetic (2003) and Fresh Trouble(2005). His agenda has been to consistently challenge Portland's young and dynamic art scene in terms of international levels of seriousness, content and excitement. - Henry Pittock
Henry Lewis Pittock (March 1, 1836 - January 28, 1919) was an Oregon (USA) pioneer, newspaper editor, publisher, and wood and paper magnate. He was active in Republican politics and Portland, Oregon civic affairs, and an avid outdoorsman and adventurer. He is frequently referred to as the founder of "The Oregonian", although it was an existing weekly before he reestablished it as the state's preeminent daily newspaper. - Abigail Scott Duniway
Abigail Scott Duniway (October 22, 1834 - October 11, 1915) was an American women's rights advocate, newspaper editor and writer, whose efforts were instrumental in gaining voting rights for women. Duniway was born Abigail Jane Scott near Groveland, Illinois, one of eleven children of John Tucker Scott and Anne Roelofson. She grew up on the family farm, and in 1852 she traveled the Oregon Trail with her family. - Ben Hur Lampman
Ben Hur Lampman (November 27, 1886-March 2, 1954) was a U.S. newspaper editor, essayist, short story writer, and poet. He was a longtime editor of "The Oregonian" in Portland, Oregon, and he served as poet laureate of Oregon from 1951 until his death. Lampman was born in Wisconsin and raised in a small town in North Dakota. As a boy, he worked in his father's print shop. He left home at age 15 and worked in the wheat country of Canada. - Harvey W. Scott
Harvey Whitefield Scott was (February 1, 1838 - August 7, 1910) was an American pioneer and newspaper editor. Scott was born in the U.S. state of Illinois and migrated to Oregon with his family in 1852. He was the first alumnus of Pacific University in 1863 and was editor of the "The Oregonian" newspaper from 1866–1872. His editorials strongly supported the Union and the newly emerging Republican party during the Civil War. - Stewart Holbrook
Stewart Hall Holbrook (1893 - 1964) was an American lumberjack, writer, and popular historian. His writings focused on what he called the "Far Corner": Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. A self-proclaimed "low-brow" historian, his topics included Ethan Allen, the railroads, the timber industry, the Wobblies, and eccentrics of the Pacific Northwest. He wrote for "The Oregonian" for over thirty years, and authored dozens of books. - Leslie M. Scott
Leslie M. Scott (February 18 1878 - December 1968) was an American historian, newspaper publisher and Republican politician in Oregon. He served as Oregon State Treasurer from 1941-1949. He served as acting Governor of Oregon for a period in 1948. He was also president of the Portland, Oregon Chamber of Commerce. He served as chairman of the "Oregon Historical Quarterly" and served more than 40 years on the board of the Oregon Historical Society. - Mary Manin Morrissey
Mary Manin Morrissey (born 1949) is a New Thought minister from Oregon, U.S.A. She has served as president of the Association for Global New Thought. and in 1995, she hosted an annual congress for the International New Thought Alliance. In 1998, she spoke before the United Nations with Arun Gandhi (grandson of Mahatma Gandhi) regarding the Season for Nonviolence. She has also participated in interfaith dialogues with the Dalai Lama. - Brad Adkins
Brad Adkins born in 1973 in Kalispell, Montana is a self-taught artist and curator currently residing in Portland, Oregon. In 2002, Chas Bowie of The Portland Mercury declared Adkins "the poster boy of low-rent artwork." Also in 2002, DK Row of The Oregonian listed Adkins as one of ten "artists you don't know, but should." Matthew Stadler of Nest and Clear Cut Press calls Adkins "an orchestrator of the quotidian", … - Andrew Dean Nystrom
Andrew Dean Nystrom is an author, journalist, editor, photographer and travel planning consultant specializing in responsible and sustainable adventure travel in Latin America and western North America. Prior to joining the Sales departments at Alaska Discovery and Mountain Travel Sobek, Nystrom was a full-time freelance travel writer for Fodor's and Lonely Planet Publications. - William A. Hilliard
William A. Hilliard (born 28 May 1927, Chicago, IL) is an American journalist. He worked at The Oregonian from 1952 to 1994, starting as a copy boy, and then rising to clerk, sports reporter, religion and general assignment reporter, assistant city editor, city editor, executive editor, and finally editor, with "full control over the newspaper's news and editorial departments." Served as president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors in 1993-94. - Tiffeny Milbrett
Tiffeny Carleen Milbrett is a women's soccer player who is currently on the United States women's national soccer team. She was born in Portland, Oregon and currently plays for the Linköpings FC in the Swedish Damallsvenskan, having transferred there from the Vancouver Whitecaps Women of the United Soccer Leagues W-League. She attended Hillsboro High School in Hillsboro, Oregon from 1987 to 1990, … - Robert K. Elder
Robert K. Elder is an American writer best known for his profiles, film reviews, technology pieces and investigative stories in the "Chicago Tribune", most notably his debunking of the Del Close skull myth. A Montana native, Elder got his start in journalism by interviewing Ken Kesey for his high school newspaper. The author encouraged Elder to attend his alma mater, the University of Oregon, which Elder did two years later. - Philip Cook
Philip Cook is the author of "Abused Men - The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence". He is a journalist who has received awards for his reporting from the Associated Press and the Professional Journalism Society among others. Philip Cook holds a degree in Journalism from the University of Oregon, and has appeared on numerous national radio and television shows such as MSNBC, Fox TV's "The Crier Report", "The O'Reilly Factor," The Sally Jesse Raphael Show", … - Aimee Phan
Aimee Phan is an Vietnamese-American author. She was born and raised in Orange County, California. She received her MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop, where she won a Maytag Fellowship. Her first book, "We Should Never Meet", was named a Notable Book by the Kiryama Prize in fiction and a finalist for the 2005 Asian American Literary Awards. Her writing has appeared in "The New York Times", "Virginia Quarterly Review", … - Charles Samuel Jackson
Charles Samuel "Sam" Jackson (September 15, 1860 - December 27, 1924) was a prominent newspaper publisher in the U.S. state of Oregon. Born in Deltaville, Virginia, Jackson went west in 1880, settling in Pendleton, Oregon. There he became publisher of the Pendleton-based "East Oregonian", developing it into a successful regional paper. - Les Balsiger
Les Balsiger is an anti-Catholic activist from Portland, Oregon. A former car salesman, Balsiger led prominent publicity campaigns in the western United States in the 1990s criticizing Roman Catholicism. - Arnold Markowitz
Arnold Markowitz, M.S.W. is a Jewish American social worker, psychotherapist, and researcher of cults. He is the Director of the Cult Hot Line and Clinic of the Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services in New York City. Markowitz also serves as Director of Brooklyn Adolescent Service, also known as "Break-Free Adolescent Services". In 1986, Markowitz was honored with the "Jonestown Memorial Award", … - Will H. Daly
Will H. Daly (1869 - 1924) was a Portland, Oregon labor leader, progressive politician and businessman. He was the first person to head both the Oregon State Federation of Labor and the Central Labor Council of Portland. He was also the first labor leader to serve on the Portland City Council, but was unsuccessful in a mayoral bid, largely due to a vigorous campaign by "The Oregonian," the city's largest newspaper, to discredit him. - Mike Bond
Mike Bond is an American novelist, war and human rights journalist, and poet. Bond was a Democratic candidate for the United States Senate in Montana in 1982, and served in Al Gore's 2000 Presidential campaign as head of Colorado Business Leaders for Gore and as a spokesman in several western states (Colorado, Utah, and Oregon) for Gore environmental positions. Bond was a correspondent for "The Financial Times" newsletters in Paris from 1990 to 1998, … - Frederick Leadbetter
Frederick W. Leadbetter (1875-1948) was an Iowa-born financier who made his fortune primarily in lumber and paper milling in the Pacific Northwest and California. He was married to Caroline Pittock, daughter of "Oregonian" publisher Henry Pittock, and with his father-in-law established Columbia River Paper Company and the Northwestern Bank, as well as several enterprises in his own right. His home on Lacamas Lake near Camas, Washington, … - S. Mark Young
S. Mark Young holds the George Bozanic and Holman G. Hurt Chair in Sports and Entertainment Business at the University of Southern California. He is also a Professor of Accounting and Management within the Marshall School of Business, and a Professor of Communication (USC Annenberg School for Communication). Young teaches and does research in the area of entertainment management with a speciality in the psychology of celebrity and popular culture. - Thomas J. Dryer
Thomas Jefferson Dryer was a newspaper publisher, Freemason, mountain climber, and politician in the Western United States. Dryer founded the "Portland Oregonian," then a weekly newspaper that has survived as the daily "Oregonian", and served as its publisher. He was also the editor of the "California Courier" in San Francisco, California. Dryer made the first documented ascent of Mount St. Helens on August 27, 1853, with three companions. - David "d.K." Row
D.K. Row is an art critic for "The Oregonian", Oregon's largest newspaper. - The Oregonian
Confidence is the key to life. How can I help you? - Brent Hunsberger
- Steve Woodward
Shhh.... I'm a reporter. Be careful what you say. ;-) - Matt
I was just going to cut and paste some stuff off Sean Connery's Myspace page, but I just read some of it and in contrast is seemes pretty flacid. - Sierra Bailey
http://www.thespetsnaz.com/tng/FM7-8/index1.html NeoN-note to self read this for airsoft!
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